Why Some Children Only Act Out at Home

by | May 27, 2020

A lot of parents notice that their kids seem to have the majority of their tantrums at home. It's incredibly frustrating, but it's also an indication of how safe your child feels with you. He has to hold himself together all day because the other adults and kids around him don't love and accept him unconditionally the way you do. At home, he can fall apart without making you love him any less. During this time when many families have been home for weeks together, defiant behavior and meltdowns may occur much more than usual. 

This pattern is normal, but that doesn't mean you have to accept your child's bad behavior at home. There are a few things you can try to help him keep his emotions and behavior in check.

  1. Give him a breather. Your child is probably at his most emotional and tired right after he gets home. Pushing him right into chores and homework might push him right past his breaking point. Allow him 30 minutes of free time right when he gets home to play, rest or just run around.

  2. Pay attention. Sometimes a child will act out at home because he doesn't know how to get a parent's attention otherwise. Set aside a time each day to give him your full, undivided focus.

  3. Lay out clear expectations and consequences. Just because a child's behavioral challenges are understandable doesn't mean his parents have to accept them. Pick a few of the behaviors that you don't like, then tell him clearly what you want him to do and what will happen if he doesn't. If he always makes a mess after school, you might tell him that he has until 5 p.m. to clean up his toys, and that he'll lose evening TV privileges if that doesn't happen. Give a warning at 4:50 and 4:55, then enforce the consequence if necessary.

Contributed by Brain Balance of Allen.. www.brainbalanceallen.com